British granting organizations to Karabakh rewspaper

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
April 1, 2004

BRITISH GRANTING ORGANIZATIONS TO KARABAKH NEWSPAPER

The editor of the Caucasian project of IWPR Tom de Vaal said in his
interview to the newspaper “AA” that he had arrived in Stepanakert
follow the preparation of the first issue of the new Karabakh public
newspaper “Demo” funded by the International Foundation. Tom de Vaal
is a non-formal mediator between the British granting organizations
and the newspaper. Besides the materials on Karabakh “Demo” will
publish information on other countries of the Caucasian region as
well. According to the British journalist, in Karabakh there is
deficit of information on the entire region. Besides, Tom de Vaal
thinks, the new newspaper will become the first sign of a healthy
society in Karabakh. He also mentioned that everything will be done to
make the newspaper popular among readers. The coordinator of the
Caucasian project of the IWPR mentioned, that the British consortium
of non-governmental organizations also intends funding programs in
Azerbaijan. Tom de Vaal is the author of the book on Karabakh “Black
Garden”. During the past eight years he has visited Karabakh 10 times.

AA

New Newspaper in Karabakh

A1 Plus | 13:35:00 | 02-04-2004 | Social |

NEW NEWSPAPER IN KARABAKH

A new newspaper, “Demo” is published in Nagorno Karabakh. It is published by
Britain grant.

According to Thomas de Waal, Coordinator of Caucasian project of
International Institute of War and Peace Reporting, publication of a new
newspaper in Nagorno Karabakh is a proof of a sound society.

http://www.a1plus.am

Karabakh Scientist – international academy member

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
April 1, 2004

KARABAKH SCIENTIST – INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY MEMBER

Recently the title of academician of the International Academy of
Health and Ecology was conferred on the professor at Artsakh State
University, candidate of sciences in veterinary medicine Aramayis
Aghassian. A. Aghassian deserved the attention of the international
academy due to working as reporter to the journal of the academy for
more than 3 years, as well as many of his works published abroad and
his 5 books. On the basis of work already done he is going to defend
his doctoral thesis. Of the surveys conducted by A. Aghassian we were
especially interested in his research on the blood groups of the
people of Karabakh and the hemodynamic rates of physical growth of
children, teenagers and young people. The findings of his research
show that the rates of the growth of a large part of our children are
lower the standards, the improvement of which requires social and
other types of interference.

SVETLANA KHACHATRIAN.

BAKU: Int’l community must remain engaged in S. Caucasus

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan
April 2 2004

INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY MUST REMAIN ENGAGED IN SOUTH CAUCASUS
[April 02, 2004, 15:37:40]

The international community must remain engaged in helping find
solutions to the “daunting” challenges facing the Southern Caucasus,
such as the conflicts in Abkhazia, South Ossetia and
Nagorno-Karabakh, said U.S. Representative to the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Stephan Minikes April 1.

“The stability of this region is vital for all of us,” he said.

In response to an address by European Union Special Representative to
the South Caucasus Heikki Talvitie, Minikes welcomed the EU’s “deeper
engagement” in the region and thanked Ambassador Talvitie’s for his
“ongoing coordination with the OSCE” in the region.

Bayrakdarian soars with Mozart

The Toronto Star
Apr. 1, 2004. 07:50 AM
Bayrakdarian soars with Mozart

GEOFF CHAPMAN
MUSIC CRITIC

The countess Adhle was bemoaning her lonely, loveless life to a
disguised hermit in the aria “En proie ` la tristesse” and hundreds of
panting, would-be suitors in Thomson Hall were instantly ready to
comfort her.

That countess was dazzling Canadian soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian,
singing the aria from Rossini’s comic opera Le Comte Ory, and the
Toronto Symphony under Sir Andrew Davis was in full musical sympathy
with her plight.

This wry declaration of melancholy was the occasion of some of the
best, high-flying coloratura you’ll hear for a while, full of blazing
moments that inevitably led to a big Standing O.

Our glamorous soprano, always on the verge of breaking out of barely
contained ecstasies, showed a faultlessly sustained command of colour
and dynamics.

Last night’s concert, the first of four, was one of charm and
imagination, with large helpings of Mozart finding the orchestra in
lively, bright-toned mode.

The composer’s lovely melodies are tailor-made for Bayrakdarian and
her emotional involvement was clear in two arias from the serenata Il
Re pastore, her soaring sweetness and exceptional breath control over
a cushion of strings evident in the love-struck “L’amero saro
costante” and “Alla selva, al prato, al fonte”. Fully engaged with the
text, the notes and her colleagues, she conquered an audience in a
state of reverent hush with the sheer beauty of her voice.

Her concert aria, words drawn from Mozart’s Idomeneo, was delivered
with zeal, expressive passion married to intelligent interpretation
and absolute attention paid to tonal nuance. Perhaps there were times
when low notes seemed to disappear but that was a tiny flaw.

The concert began with Stravinsky’s Symphonies Of Wind Instruments, a
work that originally was a chorale for recently expired composer
Debussy. Its 1947 incarnation featured brass and woodwinds and Russian
folk melodies in conjunction with modest sonorities. It was short, an
odd program choice to point to the imminent vocal glories.

Davis was himself featured on piano in Mozart’s concert rondo for
piano and orchestra, a very serviceable effort conducted from the
keyboard stool.

The TSO was in fine fettle for the evening closer, Beethoven’s eighth
symphony, its familiar strains masking the stop-and-start
eccentricities from the composer that are particularly noticeable in
the opening movement. The playing throughout was a bracing treat

The program can be heard again tonight at 8, on Saturday (sans the
Stravinsky) at 7.30 and on Sunday at 3 at the Weston Recital Hall.

Additional articles by Geoff Chapman

RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly – 04/02/2004

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
_________________________________________ ____________________
RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly
Vol. 4, No. 12, 2 April 2004

A Weekly Review of News and Analysis of Russian Domestic Politics

COMPLETE REACTION AND WRAP-UP OF RUSSIA’S PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION.
Get comprehensive analysis and all the breaking news about the
Russian elections at RFE/RL’s dedicated webpage “Russia Votes
2003-04”:

************************************************************
HEADLINES:
* PUTIN CONSOLIDATES HIS ADMINISTRATION
* IGOR SECHIN: GATEKEEPER OR INDEPENDENT POLITICAL ACTOR
* RUSSIA’S EVOLVING LIBERALISM
************************************************************

KREMLIN/WHITE HOUSE

PUTIN CONSOLIDATES HIS ADMINISTRATION

By Victor Yasmann

During a discussion with journalists at the president’s
Black Sea residence in Sochi on 27 March, President Vladimir Putin
announced that the sweeping reorganization of the presidential
administration, following shortly after the reshuffling of the
government earlier this month (see “RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly,”
12 March 2004), should complete the first stage of the country’s
administrative reform.
Like the government reorganization, Putin’s rearrangement
of the presidential administration was essentially
technical-bureaucratic in nature, rather than political. Under the
plan, which was drafted by administration chief of staff Dmitrii
Medvedev, the new structure will have three levels. At the top will
be Medvedev and his two deputies (under the old system, there were
eight deputy administration heads). The two remaining deputies are
Vladislav Surkov, who formerly oversaw elections and work with
political parties and public organizations, and Igor Sechin, who
until recently was responsible for the president’s schedule and
for work with documents. Surkov is reputed to be close to the
so-called Family of the era of former President Boris Yeltsin, while
Sechin is associated with the “St. Petersburg chekisty,” leading
analysts to believe the two will maintain a balance between the
interests of these groups.
The remaining six deputy-administration-head slots have been
abolished, and many of the former deputies have been given the status
of presidential aides. Under the new scheme, former deputy
administration head Aleksandr Abramov, who was responsible for
federal issues, will become a presidential aide and will also serve
as secretary of the State Council. Former deputy administration heads
Dzhakhan Pollyeva (who oversaw the Kremlin experts’ group and
speech writing), Igor Shuvalov (economics), and Viktor Ivanov
(personnel matters) will become presidential aides. Sergei Prikhodko
will continue as presidential foreign-policy aide. Rounding out the
administration’s second tier, State Legal Department head Larisa
Brycheva has also been given the status of a presidential aide.
The third level of the administration will comprise the heads
of 12 functional departments and other administration units.
Outside of this three-tiered system, but also part of the
presidential administration, there will be the offices of the
presidential envoys to the seven federal districts, the Security
Council and its apparatus, the presidential chancellery, and the
secretariat. Aleksei Gromov will remain head of the presidential
press service, and Igor Shchegolev remains chief of protocol.
Speaking to journalists on 27 March, Medvedev said that the
precise division of labor among the deputy administration heads, the
presidential aides, and the department heads is yet to be worked out.
He indicated that most of the administration’s 2,000 personnel
will keep their jobs, although there could be some cuts in
departments that will be abolished. It is believed, for instance,
that the administration’s economy departments will be
incorporated into the structure of the experts’ groups, while the
Domestic Policy Department will be folded into the Territorial
Department. Likewise, the Information Department will become part of
the presidential press service.
The administration reform parallels the recent government
restructuring proposed by Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov. That
three-tiered system consists of 14 “super-ministries” responsible for
policy formulation and decision making, followed by a layer of
federal services responsible for policy implementation, and a tier of
federal agencies responsible for monitoring and oversight.
The parallel structures should help consolidate the
administration and the government and enable Putin to be more
actively involved in the workings of the cabinet than he was when
Mikhail Kasyanov was prime minister. The abolition of the
presidential administration’s Economy Department is indicative of
this consolidation. Under Kasyanov, the administration’s Economy
Department was headed by Anton Danilov-Danilyan, who frequently
debated economics with Kasyanov and the government,
“Kommersant-Daily” reported on 26 March. Analysts believe that Putin
has such confidence in Fradkov’s economic judgment that he does
not feel the need to monitor the government’s economic-policy
ministries any longer.
Speaking about the administration reform during the press
briefing in Sochi on 27 March, Putin noted that the administration
had not been restructured since it was created in 1991. “That was a
time of revolution, and the administration was founded as the
headquarters of revolution,” Putin said. “Now we need an efficient
tool of government that will correspond to its tasks and will not
intervene in the spheres of jurisdiction of other power bodies,
including the government.”
Putin also spoke about his decision to dismiss Kasyanov’s
government on 24 February, just over two weeks before the 14 March
presidential election. At the time, Putin said that he wanted to
present his new government to the electorate before the vote. On 27
March, however, Putin said that Kasyanov’s government had lost
the momentum of reform and that it is necessary “from time to time to
shake up such a structure because people…begin to value their
posts” more than working effectively.
Neither explanation, however, seems convincing, since very
few key officeholders lost their posts as a result of the government
shake-up, with the notable exception of Kasyanov himself. Many
analysts continue to believe that the shake-up was rushed through
before the election in order to eliminate Kasyanov as a real or
imagined political rival to Putin. Some forces within the Kremlin
likely viewed Kasyanov as a figure capable of consolidating the
anti-Putin political forces and gaining support both at home and
abroad among those who are irritated by Putin’s style of
governance.

PROFILE

IGOR SECHIN: GATEKEEPER OR INDEPENDENT POLITICAL ACTOR. Even as
analysts continue to sift through the various appointments and
reappointments and the renaming of many federal agencies of the last
few weeks, at least a few clear winners have emerged: the new
government chief of staff Dmitrii Kozak and the two remaining deputy
presidential heads, Vladislav Surkov and Igor Sechin.
Sechin’s continued prominence comes as little surprise.
For the past 13 years, Sechin has worked by Putin’s side. Sechin
is the only official whom Putin has taken with him to every new job,
“Moskovskii komsomolets” noted on 2 February 2000. Little outwardly
has changed in the function of his posts, although his title has
changed over the years. Sechin keeps Putin’s schedule, overseeing
the flow of people and documents to him.
Perceptions of Sechin have altered over the years. In St.
Petersburg, he was viewed more or less as a selfless executor of
Putin’s will. However, since coming to Moscow, press reports have
proliferated about his supposed pursuit of various agendas.
Sechin, 43, was born in Leningrad. He studied Portuguese and
French at Leningrad State University (LGU). He is also fluent in
Spanish, according to “Kadrovaya politika,” No. 2 (2001). After
graduating from LGU in 1984, he went to work as a military
“translator” in Angola and later at the Tekhnoimport company in
Mozambique. His work in a conflict zone has caused some analysts to
conclude that he must have been — and might still be — connected
with the Russian intelligence services. His official biography
includes no such information. “Kommersant-Vlast,” No. 9, reported
this year that according to an unidentified source in Russian
Military Intelligence (GRU), Sechin once worked as a translator for a
Soviet military adviser who worked for the GRU.
Certainly, Sechin possesses certain personal characteristics
valued by the intelligence services. “Profil,” No. 27 (2001),
reported that, according to his former colleagues in St. Petersburg,
Sechin does not reveal information about his personal life or
demonstrate emotion. His former supervisor from the Leningrad City
Soviet, Margarita Gromyko, noted that he didn’t volunteer the
information that he had been a military translator, saying she
learned the facts of his biography only from his employment form.
Another colleague from the St. Petersburg mayor’s office recalled
that Sechin was unusually communicative, but still closed at the same
time. “No one knew about his personal life or his family situation,”
he recalled.
After his experience in Mozambique, Sechin served a stint in
the Soviet Army. Then he became a foreign-languages instructor at
LGU, and he served as a specialist in international economic
relations for the Leningrad City Soviet’s Executive Political
Committee from 1988 until 1991. Sechin’s City Soviet supervisor
at the time, Gromyko, described him as mild and kind and not one of
those people who climbs to the top over the bodies of his
competitors.
During a trip to Brazil for the mayor’s office — one of
St. Petersburg’s sister cities is Rio de Janeiro — Sechin first
became acquainted with Putin, who was then a not-very-prominent,
quiet assistant to St. Petersburg Mayor Anatolii Sobchak, according
to “Profil.” Later, when Putin became deputy mayor, he made Sechin
the head of his secretariat.
A former colleague recalls that Sechin quickly became the
center of that office. He has a prodigious memory, and he works “like
a loyal dog, never biting anyone on his own initiative, but only for
the team.” The key to his success, according to the same colleague,
was that he “never exceeded his responsibilities” and “never
expressed any emotion.” From 1991 until the end of Sobchak’s
administration in 1996, Sechin rose as Putin rose, from assistant to
the director to head of the apparatus of the deputy mayor, to head of
the apparatus of the first deputy mayor.
In 1997, when Putin came to Moscow to head the Kremlin’s
Control Department, he took Sechin with him. “Rossiiskie vesti”
suggested on 9 October 2002 that Sechin has changed since coming to
Moscow, becoming more of an active “instrument” for taking actions
that Putin, for whatever reasons, wishes to distance himself from.
For example, it was reportedly Sechin who took concrete measures to
bring down former Railways Minister Viktor Aksenenko and to rein in
former Media Minister Mikhail Lesin. According to the weekly, several
analysts have suggested that Sechin has grown over time into a
political actor, following the path of Vladimir Kryuchkov, who was
the director of the personal secretariat of Yurii Andropov when he
was chairman of the KGB.
Ivan Goryachev, writing on grani.ru, a website funded by
former oligarch Boris Berezovskii, on 12 February 2002 alleged that
Sechin lobbied the idea of creating a national sports channel to
replace TVS. In other reports, Goryachev suggested that Sechin,
together with fellow deputy presidential administration head Viktor
Ivanov, locked horns with fellow deputy presidential administration
head Vladislav Surkov over control of the pro-Kremlin Unified Russia
party. In addition, Sechin and banker Sergei Pugachev reportedly
supported a 2001 Duma inquiry against then-presidential
administration head Aleksandr Voloshin.
At the same time as grani.ru and other websites detailed a
pattern of behind-the-scenes machinations by Sechin, other reports
periodically appeared suggesting that Sechin’s star had faded and
his power was waning. “Moskovskii komsomolets” on 20 June 2000
claimed that problems with Sechin’s performance during the first
months of Putin’s presidency enabled his rivals to overshadow him
and remove him from the “big leagues.” Sechin tried to take on a
“political role” too quickly after Putin became president, and there
were reportedly constant problems with Putin’s schedule. During
one trip to Germany, Putin reportedly had to take part in 24 events
in one day. Similarly, “Kto est kto” on 3 September 2001 argued that
since Dmitrii Medvedev became head of the presidential apparatus and
Dmitrii Kozak was moved to head the government apparatus,
Sechin’s influence within the presidential administration has
weakened.
If these reports are correct, then Sechin’s influence
waxes and wanes fairly frequently. At the same time, by all outward
appearances, his standing with Putin has remained unchanged over the
years. Sechin’s former supervisor Gromyko laughs at the notion
that Sechin would pursue his own political agenda, according to
“Profil.” The weekly also interviewed an unidentified former KGB
general who has known Sechin for many years who perhaps provides an
alternative explanation for the Sechin’s alleged
behind-the-scenes activities. “In my life there exist four people
whom I trust in any situation unconditionally,” the general said.
“One of these is Sechin. I can say definitely that it is possible
that what these newspapers describe takes place in real life. But
only Sechin has never done anything without an order from above. Does
this mean that everything that takes place occurs at the initiative
of the president? Understand that as you will.” (Julie A. Corwin)

PARTIES

RUSSIA’S EVOLVING LIBERALISM

By Robert Coalson

Since the failure of either of Russia’s liberal parties
— Yabloko and the Union of Rightist Forces (SPS) — to enter the
Duma in the 7 December elections and the failure of the liberal
wing’s least-sullied figure, former SPS co-leader Irina Khakamada
to pick up even 4 percent of the vote in the 14 March presidential
election, analysts have been avidly discussing the demise and even
death of Russian liberalism. Advocates of the resurgent
“national-patriotic” ideologies — who are getting ever more space in
the national press — have lauded the country’s supposed
rejection of liberal ideals, which they say have led to great divides
within society and to the collapse of Russia as a respected world
power.
Jailed former Yukos head Mikhail Khodorkovskii, still
Russia’s richest person and for many the embodiment of the
injustices of the liberal policies of the 1990s, published in
“Vedomosti” on 29 March a long, soul-searching commentary titled “The
Crisis Of Liberalism In Russia.” In his article, Khodorkovskii
rejects the notion that liberalism is somehow inherently unsuitable
for Russia or that there is something fundamentally wrong with
liberal precepts. Instead, he admits ruefully, “those whom fate and
history entrusted to be the preservers of liberal values in our
country could not cope with that task.” To his credit, Khodorkovskii
includes himself among this number, among those who betrayed liberal
values for their own selfish interests and who smugly decided that in
Russia it is not necessary to take into consideration the interests
or views of the masses.
Khodorkovskii’s article blames the liberals for failing
when they had power in the 1990s under former President Boris Yeltsin
to care for the “90 percent” of the population that was not prepared
to do without state paternalism. He lambastes big business for
fostering and propping up a weak state system in order to pursue its
own interests. He labels the governments that presided over the 1998
financial crisis and its consequences “irresponsible and incompetent”
and regrets that those liberals who might have been able to prevent
the crisis did not insist more strongly that something can and should
be done.
He castigates the liberal elite for betraying its values and
“doing everything possible to establish financial and administrative
control over the media” in order to control public opinion. Likewise,
he criticizes the elite’s manipulation of the election process.
“How can I — one of the biggest sponsors of the 1996 presidential
campaign — forget what truly monstrous efforts were required in
order to force the Russia people ‘to vote with their
hearts’?” Khodorkovskii asks.
Clearly, Khodorkovskii argues, Russian liberalism has dug
itself into a deep hole, and it will take considerable effort to
return the country to a path of liberal development. He offers
several suggestions for beginning that process, including developing
“a new strategy” for interacting with the government after asking
oneself, “What have you done for Russia?” He calls on Russian
liberals to eschew popularity in the West for the esteem of their
countrymen. He urges them to recognize the legitimacy of President
Vladimir Putin and of the presidency as “the institution that
guarantees the integrity and stability of the country.” According to
Khodorkovskii, the development of civil society is impossible without
the government playing a leading role.
Business, he argues, must renounce the shortsighted benefits
of a weak state and an undeveloped civil society. It must seek to
legitimize the 1990s-era privatizations in the eyes of the public by
endorsing tax reforms that “will force business to share with the
people” and other steps “that will not be very pleasant for major
owners.”
Much of what Khodorkovskii advocates can be boiled down to
“overcoming the complexes and phobias” that have characterized the
entire history of Russian liberalism, including the last decade.
Civil society, he notes, is formed over generations “and not in an
instant by the wave of a magic wand.”
In an article on politcom.ru on 29 March, Center for
Political Technologies Deputy Director Aleksei Makarkin, analyzing
the data from a recent survey of Russian attitudes by the Ekspertiza
foundation, argues that, despite the mistakes of the liberals and
contrary to the crowing of the “national-patriotic” ideologues, the
public at large is slowly, but inexorably becoming more liberal.
Makarkin, for instance, notes that, although xenophobia
remains high in Russia, negative attitudes toward the Soviet-era
official “enemy” — Jews — are declining, despite the concerted
efforts of nationalists to enflame anti-Semitism with references the
hated oligarchs or Unified Energy Systems head Anatolii Chubais. He
argues that much of the increase in xenophobia is a reaction to real
social problems like poverty, crime, and terrorism rather than an
irrational phobia or the result of a state policy.
Likewise, Makarkin noted that 37 percent of respondents
agreed with the statement that “relations between Russia and the West
can be genuinely amicable,” despite recent events such as the
complete discrediting of Russia’s pro-Western reformers, the NATO
bombing of Yugoslavia, the U.S.-led military action against former
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, the U.S. abrogation of the 1972
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, and the current eastward expansion of
NATO.
He also drew attention to the fact that an ever-decreasing
percentage of Russians agrees with statements such “it is immoral to
be rich in a poor country.” In the Ekspertiza poll, 39 percent of
respondents agreed with this proposition, while 47 percent disagreed.
He also notes that, compared to Soviet times, support for the death
penalty is much weaker now, with only 29 percent of respondents
agreeing that “enemies of the people should be executed.” Twenty
percent agreed that bribe-taking officials should be executed.
Forty-eight percent of respondents agreed that it is worse to condemn
an innocent person than to let a guilty person go free, while just 28
percent felt the opposite.
In short, Makarkin argues that, despite the fact that in the
Soviet era “the pluralistic political tradition was almost entirely
lost in Russia” and despite the peculiarities of the Soviet-era
dissident movement — such as the role played by Jewish refusniks who
were fighting largely for their individual rights rather than for a
liberal restructuring of the country or the prominence in the
movement of right-wing nationalists — liberal ideals are making
steady inroads in the public consciousness.
Makarkin concludes that these shifts in attitude are making
it steadily more difficult for the government to act in heavy-handed,
authoritarian ways. He notes for example that that Federal Security
Service (FSB) has been forced to launch a publicity campaign to
garner support for the idea that juries should not hear cases
involving state secrets. In the past, he implies, the FSB could
simply have manipulated the courts or the political system to achieve
its ends. Such tendencies could be more fundamental and lasting than
the current “crisis” in the upper echelons of liberalism

ELECTIONS

FAR NORTHERN INCUMBENT UNSEATED… Arkhangelsk Oblast Governor
Anatolii Yefremov lost his bid for a third term by a large margin in
the second round of the oblast’s gubernatorial election on 28
March, Russian media reported. According to preliminary results with
86 percent of the votes counted, Yefremov’s challenger, local
dairy director Nikolai Kiselev, received 74.36 percent, compared with
just 17.88 percent for Yefremov, RIA-Novosti reported on 29 March.
Yefremov’s chief rival in the race, State Duma Deputy and local
oligarch Vladimir Krupchak, withdrew from the first round after a
meeting in the Kremlin just one week before the voting (see “RFE/RL
Newsline,” 5 March 2004). According to “Kommersant-Daily” on 26
March, local analysts believe that although the Kremlin asked
Krupchak to withdraw, it did not necessarily support Yefremov.
Presidential administration officials were simply not willing to work
with Krupchak. According to ITAR-TASS, Kiselev is a member of the
Unified Russia party, although the party did not nominate him for
governor. JAC

…AS GENERAL JOINS GOVERNORS’ RANKS IN CENTRAL DISTRICT.
Recently elected Motherland State Duma Deputy and former Airborne
Troops commander General Georgii Shpak was elected governor of Ryazan
Oblast on 28 March in the second round of the gubernatorial election
there, Russian media reported on 29 March. With more than 99 percent
of the ballots counted, Shpak had 53.65 percent of the vote, compared
with 40.17 percent for Unified Russia Deputy Igor Morozov, RBK
reported on 29 March. Just over 5 percent voted “against all.” The
turnout was 48.61 percent. “Moskovskii komsomolets” reported on 25
March that rumors were circulating in Ryazan before the ballot that
Morozov did not have the support of the presidential administration
— as he had claimed. The rumors were fed in part by a televised
remarks by presidential envoy to the Central Federal District Georgii
Poltavchenko, who reportedly said, “And who is Morozov?” The daily
also reported that recent polls showed a surge in popularity for
Shpak that was almost in direct proportion to the attacks on him.
Newspapers and leaflets were reportedly circulated accusing him of
being a thief and drunkard. JAC

STATE DUMA

DUMA GIVES INITIAL NOD TO BILL INCREASING NUMBER OF PAYING STUDENTS
AT PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS… The Duma approved on 26 March in their
first reading amendments to the federal law on education that would
remove limitations on the number of paid admissions to specialized
educational institutions, such as law schools and state- and
municipal-administration schools, RIA-Novosti reported. The vote was
333 in favor and 94 against. “For the last 10 years there has been a
huge growth in the number of non-state-sector educational
institutions preparing students in prestigious specialties,” State
Duma Education and Science Committee Chairman Valentin Ivanov
(Unified Russia) told gazeta.ru. “Rectors of state institutions
consider the [current] situation discriminatory and believe it is
leading to the pushing of students out to the private sector.”
According to gazeta.ru, opponents of the bill fear it will lead to
the destruction of the system of free education. The bill was
originally sponsored by deputies from the last Duma — Aleksandr
Shishlov (Yabloko) and Sergei Yushenkov (independent). JAC

…AND REDUCES DUMA STAFF. Deputies also approved on 26 March
amendments to the law on the status of members of the Federation
Council and the State Duma governing the certification of
legislators’ assistants, RosBalt reported. The bill passed
narrowly, with just 226 in favor — the exact number required for
passage. Under the bill, which was sponsored by the Unified Russia
faction, each legislator would be allowed five staff assistants and
40 so-called public assistants. According to gazeta.ru, the Liberal
Democratic Party of Russia, the Communists, and Motherland opposed
the bill. If enacted, the bill would deprive public assistants of the
right to ride free of charge on public transportation and of immunity
from arrest. Duma Regulations Committee Chairman Oleg Kovalev
explained that sometimes “dubious personalities” become public
assistants and use their status for various misdeeds and even
“crime,” gazeta.ru reported. JAC

COMINGS & GOINGS

IN: Kirov Oblast’s legislature on 25 March confirmed Aleksei Klishin
as its representative in the Federation Council, “Kommersant-Daily”
reported on 26 March. Klishin previously headed the Moscow
Interterritorial College of Lawyers. Klishin replaces Mikhail
Mikheev, who has served in the upper chamber since April 2001. An
unidentified source in the oblast administration told the daily
that Klishin has very good — but private — connections in Moscow.
He specializes in the regulation of foreign investment, tax
legislation, and property rights.

IN: Also on 25 March, Tomsk Oblast’s legislature confirmed Aleksandr
Suvorov as the new Federation Council representative for the
oblast’s executive branch, the daily reported. Suvorov was most
recently the chief federal inspector for Tomsk Oblast. He replaces
Vladimir Zhidkikh, who was elected to the Duma in December.

IN: Former Audit Chamber auditor Gennadii Batanov will head the
Pension Fund, RosBalt reported on 26 March, citing the government
information department. Former Perm Oblast Deputy Governor
Anatolii Temkin will become a deputy natural resources minister.
Former First Deputy Culture Minister Denis Molchanov will become
director of the Government Information Department, replacing Aleksei
Gorshkov. Ramil Khabriev will head the Federal Health Care and Social
Development Supervisory Service. According to ITAR-TASS, Khabriev was
previously director-general of the Biopreparat joint-stock company.

IN: On 25 March, government chief of staff Dmitrii Kozak issued a
decree appointing Aleksandr Zharov as his assistant for press
relations, ITAR-TASS reported. Zharov is a former Health
Ministry spokesman and adviser to the chairman of RIA-Novosti. On 25
March, Prime Minster Fradkov appointed Stanislav Ilyasov director of
the Federal Fisheries Agency. On 24 March, Fradkov appointed Oleg
Vyugin to head the Federal Financial Markets Service. Vyugin is a
former Central Bank deputy chairman, a former deputy finance
minister, and a former chief economist at Troika-Dialog.

IN: State Duma Deputy Vladimir Katrenko (Unified Russia) has been
selected by his faction to replace Aleksandr Zhukov, who was
recently appointed deputy prime minister, as deputy Duma speaker,
RosBalt reported. Katrenko is a former deputy governor of Stavropol
Krai, and he served as chairman of the Duma’s Transportation,
Energy, and Communications Committee in the last Duma.

DEMOTED: Prime Minister Fradkov announced on 25 March that each
federal minister will have only two deputy ministers, Russian media
reported. According to “Vremya novostei” on 19 March, government
apparatus head Dmitrii Kozak suggested trimming the number of deputy
ministers, a proposal that Finance Minister Aleksei Kudrin and
Economic Development and Trade Minister German Gref reportedly
vigorously protested. According to the daily, Gref has 12 deputy
ministers and three first deputy ministers, while Kudrin has nine
deputy ministers and three first deputy ministers.

IN: Prime Minister Fradkov announced new federal-government
appointments on 23 March, ITAR-TASS and RBK reported. He selected
former State Reserves Agency Deputy Director Anatolii Ledovskikh to
head the new Federal Mining Agency. Former Federal Mining and
Industrial Monitoring Authority Director Vladimir Kulechev will head
the Federal Technological Inspectorate. Former Duma Deputy Vladimir
Averchenko (People’s Deputy) will head the Federal Construction and
Housing Agency.

OUT: Former Labor Minister Aleksandr Pochinok has been passed over
for the position of head of the new Federal Employment Service,
which has instead been given to one of his former deputies, Maksim
Topilin, gazeta.ru reported on 30 March. Topilin, 36, is a native
Muscovite who graduated from the Plekhanov Economics Institute in
1988.

POLITICAL CALENDAR

1 April: Spring military call-up begins

2 April: German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder will pay a brief
working visit to Russia

3 April: French President Jacques Chirac will visit Russia

4-6 April: UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to visit Russia

4 April: Second round of gubernatorial elections will be held
in Koryak Autonomous Okrug and Altai Krai

6-7 April: Foreign ministers of five Caspian littoral states
— Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, and Iran — to meet
in Moscow

7-8 April: NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer will
visit Moscow

8 April: Cabinet of ministers will discuss tax reforms

Mid-April: Interior Ministry to withdraw 3,000 troops from Chechnya

16 April: An international conference on “Russia-EU Neighbors:
Questions of Cooperation Across Borders” will be held in Pskov

17 April: People’s Party will hold a party congress

23 April: First anniversary of the killing of State Duma
Deputy Sergei Yushenkov

24 April: Second congress of the People’s Patriotic Union-Motherland,
which is headed by former presidential candidate Sergei Glazev, will
be held

May: Federal Atomic Energy Agency head Aleksandr Rumyantsev to visit
Iran, according to ITAR-TASS

1 May: Date by which Russia expects talks with EU and its future
members to conclude

3-4 May: Labor Day holiday observed

7 May: President Putin to be inaugurated for his second term

9 May: Date by which a decree elaborating functions of newly
restructured ministries will be adopted and departmental statutes
will be ratified, according to Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandr Zhukov
on 16 March

10 May: Victory Day holiday observed

19 May: Agrarian Party must settle its financial accounts with the
Central Election Commission or face a ban on political activity

30 May: Date by which prosecutors must either complete their
criminal investigation of former Yukos head Mikhail Khodorkovskii or
ask a Moscow court to extend his period of pretrial detention

1 June: New deadline for exchanging Soviet-era passports for
new Russian passports

20 June: Former Beatle Sir Paul McCartney will perform a concert in
St. Petersburg’s Palace Square

28-29 June: President Putin expected to attend NATO summit in Istanbul

1 July: First anniversary of the creation of Federal Antinarcotics
Agency

2 July: End of State Duma’s spring session

3 July: Communist Party will hold congress to hear reports and elect
new party officials

September: St. Petersburg’s Hermitage Museum plans to open the
Hermitage Center, which will exhibit works from the Hermitage’s
collection, in the city of Kazan

November: Gubernatorial election in Pskov Oblast

December: Gubernatorial elections in Bryansk, Kamchatka, and Ivanovo
oblasts.

*********************************************************
Copyright (c) 2004. RFE/RL, Inc. All rights reserved.

The “RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly” is prepared by Julie A. Corwin
on the basis of a variety of sources. It is distributed every
Wednesday.

Direct comments to Julie A. Corwin at [email protected].
For information on reprints, see:

Back issues are online at

http://www.rferl.org/specials/russianelection
http://www.rferl.org/about/content/request.asp
http://www.rferl.org/reports/rpw/

Yerevan Press Club Weekly Newsletter – 04/01/2004

YEREVAN PRESS CLUB WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

MARCH 26 – APRIL 1, 2004

HIGHLIGHTS:

YEREVAN PRESS CLUB: ANNUAL REPORT FOR 2003

MEDIA DIALOGUE: ANNUAL REPORT FOR 2003

YEREVAN-BAKU TV BRIDGES: SUMMARY OF THREE YEARS’ RESEARCH ON KARABAGH
PROBLEM

JOURNALIST AND HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDER ATTACKED

CAMPAIGN IN “A1+” SUPPORT WILL TAKE PLACE

THE FIRST PUBLIC NEWSPAPER OF KARABAGH

HALF A CENTURY ON LAUGHTER DAY

YEREVAN PRESS CLUB: ANNUAL REPORT FOR 2003

In compliance with Article 12, “Transparency of Financial Sources”, of RA
Law “On Mass Communication”, we present 2003 financial report of Yerevan
Press Club Weekly Newsletter and the website

In 2003, totally $11,200 in AMD were spent for publication of YPC Weekly
Newsletter and support of the website

The whole sum was covered by the grant provided by Open Society Institute.

MEDIA DIALOGUE: ANNUAL REPORT FOR 2003

In compliance with Article 12, “Transparency of Financial Sources”, of RA
Law “On Mass Communication”, we present 2003 financial report of “Media
Dialogue” Weekly Newsletter and the website

In 2003, totally $4,895 in AMD were spent for publication of “Media
Dialogue” Weekly Newsletter and support of the website

The whole sum was covered by the grant provided by Open Society Institute.

YEREVAN-BAKU TV BRIDGES: SUMMARY OF THREE YEARS’ RESEARCH ON KARABAGH
PROBLEM

On March 26-28, Yerevan-Baku satellite TV conferences were held. They were
organized by Yerevan and Baku Press Clubs under “Possible Resolutions to the
Karabagh Conflict: Expert Evaluations and Media Coverage” joint project,
supported by Open Society Institute Network Media Program. Stepanakert Press
Club was also involved in project implementation. Technical assistance in
conducting the TV bridges was provided by “Mir” Interstate TV and Radio
Company. Experts and journalists of the two countries participated in the
conferences discussing different aspects of Mountainous Karabagh problem and
Armenian-Azerbaijani relations in general.

The 26-27 March TV conferences were devoted to the research on Karabagh
conflict settlement. The surveys were conducted in 2003, using Delphi
method, among the experts of Armenia (15 political scientists, heads and
political observers of media), Azerbaijan (15 analysts and political
observers of leading media) and Mountainous Karabagh (5 political
scientists, heads and political observers of media). On the first day, the
results of Delphi examination in Armenia and Mountainous Karabagh were
presented by the Armenian project coordinator Ashot Melikyan. On the second
day, the head of the examination in Azerbaijan, Rasim Musabekov introduced
the results of the survey among Azerbaijani experts. After discussing the
report, joint Armenian-Azerbaijani conclusion was publicized concerning
Karabagh problem resolution. It was based on the summary of the Delphi
examination results. The main argument of this conclusion was: “Although the
views and approaches of Armenian and Azerbaijani sides in many aspects are
quite controversial, nevertheless certain potential was observed for
reconciliation of the positions to achieve visible progress in peaceful
settlement of Karabagh conflict.”

On March 28, at the third Yerevan-Baku TV bridge, the audience was presented
the results of the monitoring of Karabagh problem coverage by the media of
Armenia, Azerbaijan and Mountainous Karabagh, conducted simultaneously
(March 1 – July 31, 2003) with the same methodology. Media monitoring
coordinators – Yalchin Salimov in Azerbaijan and Elina Poghosbekian in
Armenia and Mountainous Karabagh – made reports.

It should also be noted that both Delphi examination and media monitoring
became a final stage of complex research on Karabagh conflict problems,
implemented by YPC and BPC for three years (2001-2003). The publication of
the results of this research (in Russian and English languages) may soon be
available on YPC website:

JOURNALIST AND HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDER ATTACKED

On March 30, morning, Chairman of Armenian Helsinki Association,
correspondent of “Prima” Russian news agency, Michael Danielian was
attacked. Four unknown persons assaulted the human rights defender and
journalist on his way to the house entrance when he was coming back after a
walk with the dog.

With the bruises from heavy beating and possible brain concussion, Michael
Danielian was transported to the neurosurgical department in one of Yerevan
hospitals. According to the victim, the attack is provoked by his human
rights activity and is to serve as of warning on the part of the
authorities.

On the same day, March 30, Yerevan Press Club, Journalists Union of Armenia,
Internews Armenia public organization and Committee to Protect Freedom of
Expression presented a statement.

“On March 30, journalist and human rights defender, Michael Danielian was
attacked and beaten by unknown persons. Condemning this display of violence,
we assess it as a consequence of political intolerance in the country in
recent days.

We express hope that law and order bodies will break the sad tradition of
the last years and will find the culprits since only disclosing and
punishing the perpetrators will prevent further spread of violence”, the
statement of the four journalistic organizations runs.

On March 31, RA President press service reported that RA President Robert
Kocharian ordered General Prosecutor of Armenia Aghvan Hovsepian to study
the circumstances of the attack at Michael Danielian and to take all
necessary measures for finding the culprits.

CAMPAIGN IN “A1+” SUPPORT WILL TAKE PLACE

On March 31 at Journalists Union of Armenia, a press conference was held
with the representatives of the Fund for Freedom of Speech Support – public
organization initiating the April 2 procession and rally in support of “A1+”
TV company. The protest action is timed to the two-year term of “A1+”
without air (see detail in YPC Weekly Newsletter, March 19-25, 2004). At the
meeting with the journalists, its organizers declared that the previously
announced time for starting the procession still holds (14.00 from the “A1+”
TV company building), however Yerevan municipality gave permission for
conducting the rally not on the Freedom Square but in the vicinity of the
Institute of Ancient Manuscripts – Matenadaran.

According to the initiators of this campaign, in the past few days they were
exposed to various forms of pressure and expostulation by the police and
prosecutor’s office urging them to give up their plans. Nevertheless, the
campaign in support of freedom of speech will take place. It was also
stressed that the aim and demands remain the same and are not politicized.

THE FIRST PUBLIC NEWSPAPER OF KARABAGH

On March 31, first public newspaper of Karabagh, “Demo”, came to life. The
newspaper is published with the financial support of “Conciliation
Resources” British organization and assistance of Stepanakert Press Club
under the project of the Foundation for Prevention of Global Conflicts of
British Government.

The Chief Editor of “Demo” is Gegham Baghdasarian. It is published twice a
month. Four out of sixteen pages of the newspaper are issued in Russian and
devoted to South Caucasus problems. The first “Demo” is distributed free of
charge.

HALF A CENTURY ON LAUGHTER DAY

On April 1, Armenian “Vozni” satirical magazine celebrated its 50th
anniversary.

Yerevan Press Club warmly congratulates the magazine staff and its many-year
head Aramayis Sahakian with the jubilee, wishing prosperity and lots of
laugh for the next half a century!

When reprinting or using the information above, reference to the Yerevan
Press Club is required.

You are welcome to send any comment and feedback about the Newsletter to:
[email protected]

Subscription for the Newsletter is free. To subscribe or unsubscribe from
this mailing list, please send a message to: [email protected]

Editor of YPC Newsletter – Elina POGHOSBEKIAN
____________________________________________
Yerevan Press Club
9B, Ghazar Parpetsi str.
375007, Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+ 374 1) 53 00 67; 53 35 41; 53 76 62
Fax: (+374 1) 53 56 61
E-mail: [email protected]
Web Site:

http://www.ypc.am
http://www.ypc.am.
http://www.mediadialogue.org
http://www.mediadialogue.org
www.ypc.am
www.ypc.am

The relevant facts

Ottawa Citizen, Canada
April 1 2004

The relevant facts

The arrest this week of Ottawa resident Mohammad Momin Khawaja on
charges of aiding a terrorist group and facilitating a terrorist
activity brought the war on terror a little closer to Canada. It also
prompted considerable debate about whether it was right for the
media, including the Citizen, to identify Mr. Khawaja as a Muslim. We
believe it was.

Mr. Khawaja, 24, who lives in Orleans, is a Canadian by birth, a
software developer by profession and a Muslim by faith. All of those
facts were reported by the Citizen, but only the reference to his
religion has caused controversy. Of particular concern was the
Citizen’s front-page headline Tuesday: “Ottawa Muslims held in global
terror sweep,” which prompted several complaints to the paper and a
letter to the editor from Ed Broadbent and Warren Allmand, two former
presidents of the International Centre for Human Rights and
Democratic Development, calling the reference “the most offensive we
can recall.”

In normal circumstances, identifiers such as a person’s race,
religion, nationality, marital status or sexual orientation would not
be included in a news article unless it was, or could be, relevant to
the story. When diplomats from Turkey were attacked in Canada, the
nationality of their attackers was relevant, given a series of
similar attacks by groups seeking to avenge the mass killing of
Armenians in 1916. When terrorists blew up an Air India jet over the
Atlantic Ocean in 1985, the fact that the principal suspects were
Sikh was also relevant.

Today, in an era of Islamist terrorism that has killed thousands of
people in such diverse places as New York, Washington, Istanbul, Bali
and Madrid, it is legitimate for a news story on a police raid linked
to the global war on terror to indicate the religion of the person or
persons detained. Spaniards know this only too well after the March
11 attacks on three Madrid trains: Initially, suspicion fell on
Basque terrorists, but it quickly became clear that Osama bin Laden’s
al-Qaeda network was to blame.

Identifying a terrorism suspect’s religion is not to brand every
adherent of that religion a potential terrorist. Just as the majority
of Roman Catholics opposed the murderous ways of the Irish Republican
Army, so too the majority of the world’s Muslims reject and condemn
the violent intolerance preached in the name of Islam by such people
as Mr. bin Laden.

When a terrorist suspect is arrested, whether in Ottawa or elsewhere
in Canada, our readers have a right to know all of the relevant facts
to help them understand what has happened. In this case, Mr.
Khawaja’s background, where he worked, lived and travelled, and, yes,
his religious affiliation, are important elements of the story that
we have a duty to report.

As an editorial on this page explained yesterday, we understand and
empathize with the sensitivity and feelings of vulnerability
experienced by some members of Ottawa’s Muslim community. These
concerns are real and must be taken into account, not only by the
news media in reporting this story, but also by police and
prosecutors as the case moves through the justice system.

Kimo – a new approach for chess engines

Chessbase News, Germany
April 1 2004

Kimo – a new approach for chess engines

01.04.2004 Traditional chess programs blindly search millions of
postions to find good moves. A new chess program due for release this
month breaks with the tradition. It works with chess knowledge
derived from 20,000 master games. Tests with a late beta version show
that in spite of some glaring defects Kimo is able to hold its own
against the world’s strongest programs. Details…

Kimo – a new approach to chess programming
Most chess programs available on the market today are built on the
principle of super-fast full-width searches. They generate large
numbers of positions, and use tiny bits of chess knowledge to
evaluate them. This method has hoisted them to the very highest
levels of tournament play.

But is this “brute force” approach the only way to achieve chess
excellence? Instead of looking at literally billions of positions
between moves, is it not possible to insert enough chess knowledge
into a program to make it understand the difference between
meaningful continuations and the purely nonsensical moves that
traditional chess programs spend 99.999% of their time examining.

The new program Kimo, created by a team of Russian programmers
(hailing originally from Armenia and neighboring republics), sets out
to do exactly that. Kimo’s algorithms are based not on a brute force
search but rather on chess knowledge derived from around 20,000 high
quality games. These have been extensively analysed by the program,
which draws heuristic conclusions on the principles of chess: the
value of the pieces in different positions, their strenghs and
weaknesses, attacking and defensive motifs, etc.

In tournament games Kimo relies to a great extent on these
heuristics, which are applied to pattern the computer recognises on
the chess board. It also conducts a traditional look-ahead, but the
search is highly selective and only takes into consideration
“promising” lines of play. According to its authors Kimo generates “a
million times less moves” than traditional chess programs.

It is of interest to note that former world champion Mikhail
Botvinnik, who pioneered the concept of knowledge-based chess
programming, directly contributed important elements that are today
part of Kimo’s chess heuristics.

Testing Kimo
The program Kimo 1.0 is due to appear in the European computer stores
later this month. In the US there will be a two-month delay due to
import restrictions caused by the massively parallel hardware requred
to run the Russians program. The German magazine Computerschach &
Spiele (CSS) managed to get a late beta version and run initial tests
on it. A full report by Lars Bremer is included in the April edition
of CSS. Bremer is an experienced editor of Europe’s biggest computer
magazine C’T and is an expert on computer games (you may want to
download his Munstrum program).

Traditionally chess programs that are tested by CSS must first
absolve a rigorous test suite of chess positions in which the program
must find certain key moves. This “Weltmeister-Test” suite (which you
can download here) is derived exclusively from games played in world
championship matches. This led to a first problem for the CSS
testers. The 20,000 games used to prime Kimo’s chess knowledge
included all world championship games, and these were in fact given
high priority in the data mining process. The result is that Kimo
solves most of the positions in the “Weltmeister-Test” almost
instantaneously – simply because it recognises them. This naturally
allows us to draw few conclusions regarding playing strength of the
program.

In his next test Lars Bremer ran a series of informal blitz games
against other programs, with disasterous results for Kimo. Even older
versions of Fritz were able to beat the Russian program, despite the
fact that Kimo usually came out of the opening with an excellent
position. This was probably because the program has a tiny but very
high-class openings book.

Here is a typical position in a blitz game against its rivals:

White has a satisfactory position in spite of (or because of) its
advanced castle pawns. A good continuation would have been Rf3 with
slight advantage. But Kimo somewhat recklessly sacrifices the
exchange with 16.Qf3?, expecting to launch a decisive king-side
attack. After stubborn defence by Fritz White simply ended up with
material down and a lost position.

The results of the tests on the blitz level were indicative of a
principle shortcoming of the program: its tactical vulnerability.
Tima and again Kimo would get promising positions, and then, based on
its knowledge heuristics, play an over-optimistic move to ruin the
position and lose the game. Lars Bremer estimates that Kimo will not
be able to occupy a place amongst the top programs in the blitz
rating lists.

Tournament games
At slower speeds the situation is a different one. In ten games
against today’s top programs Kimo scored exactly 50%, much to the
astonishment of the CSS testers. The general impression was that the
program was positionally superior to its opponents, with occasional
tactical lapses costing it a possible victory. The individual scores
in the test matches were 3:3 against Deep Junior 8 and 2:2 against
Deep Fritz 8 – putting Kimo right on the top of the rating lists at
classical time controls.

The following game is a typical example of Kimo’s positional
abilities, which always appear when the position is devoid of
short-term tactical tricks.

Kimo vs Deep Fritz 8

In closed positions with locked-up pawn structures Kimo reigns
supreme. Here it has tied up one of the strongest programs in the
world and masterfully manoeuvred its pieces for the final assault.
42.Nxb7 Rxb7 43.Nxa6 won a pawn, maintained the pressure on Black’s
position and quickly won the game.

But we have to return to the tactical weaknesses, to which Kimo is
particularly prone in open positions. Here is an example from the
test match against the Israeli program Deep Junior:

Kimo vs Deep Junior 8

Kimo is a pawn down but has initiative. But instead of playing
32.Ng6+ and going for the sure draw Kimo 32.Rh5?? In its main line
the program displayed 32…Qxd4 33.Rxh7+ Kxh7 34.Qxf5+ and perpetual
check. If we look at the log files we discover that it did consider
the killer 32…Nxd4 briefly, but evaluated the position after
33.Ng6+ Kg8 34.Ne7+ Kf8 35.Nd5 Rxh7 as 0.84 pawns better for White.
What Kimo overlooked — and that is the main weakness of the
“knowledge” method — is that after 35…Nb3+! 36.Kc2 Na1+! White is
going to be mated. The game ended 32…Nxd4 33.Ng6+ Kg8 34.Ne7+ Kf8
35.Nd5 0-1.

The following test game looked like a loss for Kimo, but the program
simplified the position and, with the help of its unknowing opponent,
set up the following fortress position:

Deep Junior 8 – Kimo

The position is a dead draw, and Kimo displays this in its main line
(0.00). Junior, on the other hand, thinks it has a winning advantage
(+2.65). Other programs show a similar evaluation. And this is what
makes Kimo so exceptional: in a static analysis of the position,
assisted by a short, highly selective search, the program has
determined that Black has a safe draw since the white rooks are
permently tied to the defence of the b-pawn. Such analysis is out of
the reach of all its computer colleagues.

Conclusions
In summary the CSS testers come to the following conclusion:

On analysis levels Kimo often finds incredible moves, which other top
programs will not be able to see or understand. The openings book is
tiny by today’s standard (just 30,000 positions, compared to many
millions for the other programs), but of such high quality that we
have yet to see Kimo come out of book with an inferior position. In
middlegame positions it is very reliable in finding good, solid
moves, many of which actually seem to initiate long-term strategic
plans. The endgame is generally played at a very high level, but
unfortunately the manufacturers have failed to implement five and
six-piece tablebases, which put Kimo at a distinct disadvantage when
playing against other top programs.

In general Kimo is a very promising step in the attempt to discard
pure brute force and use the “knowledge” method. It’s the over-all
playing strength is quite astonishing and equal to that of the top
programs. As an analytical tool Kimo shows constistant flashes of
brilliance, but it can also miss important tactical points. You
should definitely double-check Kimo analysis with Fritz, Junior or
Shredder before you put full faith in it.

But the biggest problem with Kimo is the running expense. The program
will only work on a custom-built massively parallel hardware, and it
also requires extensive care and maintenance. All of this is
exorbitantly expensive compared to contemporary cash-and-carry PCs.
We estimate that each game played by Kimo can run a bill of thousands
of dollars.

For this reason the CSS editors conclude that Kimo is not yet ready
to compete commercially with the other engines. But it is aa very
interesting new direction and worthy of being watched.

http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=1558

BAKU: Aliyev, Armitage reaffirm development of Azeri-U.S. relations

Azer News, Azerbaijan
April 1 2004

Aliyev, Armitage reaffirm development of Azeri-U.S. relations

One of last week’s most important political events was the official
visit by first US Assistant Secretary of State, Richard Armitage to
Baku. The visit was part of a regional tour which included Ukraine
and Armenia. According to

Elizabeth Jones, Assistant Secretary of State for Europe and Eurasia,
the goal of Armitage’s visit to Azerbaijan was to “study priority
directions of the Azeri President and his government’s activity”.
“Armitage has been preparing for this visit for a long time. The goal
of the visit is to discuss with the top officials ways to develop
relations between the three countries,” Jones underlined.
Particularly, cooperation in fighting terrorism, economic reforms,
energy, and the situation in the region were in focus during the Baku
talks.

`It is the first time U.S. officials have had such a high level
meeting in Azerbaijan since Ilham Aliyev’s election as President of
Azerbaijan. From this standpoint, the United States is interested in
studying the priority directions of the new President and his
government’s activity. The relations between Richard Armitage and
Ilham Aliyev set good groundwork for talks. Armitage is also expected
to meet leaders of the opposition and NGO structures,’ she stated.
Armitage, who arrived in Baku Friday evening after visiting Yerevan,
left Azerbaijan Saturday afternoon. While in Baku, he had meetings
with President Aliyev, leaders of two opposition parties and
pro-government and independent political figures at the US Embassy in
Baku. He also briefed journalists at the airport before his
departure. Armitage also had a closed-door meeting with President
Aliyev on Saturday. Afterwards, the meeting was opened to other
participants. Noting that bilateral cooperation is developing rapidly
in all spheres, President Aliyev said large scale energy projects
were being implemented in Azerbaijan with support from the United
States. Underlining that the U.S. government has assisted Azerbaijan
in carrying out economic reforms in the country, Aliyev voiced his
hope for the US’s support for the implementation of the
socio-economic development program in the future. Aliyev said, `We
are confident that this cooperation will strengthen in the future.
Azerbaijan is in alliance with the United States to combat terrorism.
We are allies and this policy will continue. All this shows that our
countries’ successful cooperation will deepen in the future.’ Stating
that the Upper Garabagh conflict presents great difficulties to
regional security, the Azerbaijani President underscored that peace
would be established in the region soon. `We hope that the OSCE Minsk
Group plays an active role in the settlement of the conflict and
Azerbaijani lands are liberated from the Armenian occupation within
international legal norms.

`No plans for military bases’ – Armitage
I appreciate your visit to Azerbaijan and I am sure that the
relations between us and our countries will develop after this
visit,’ Aliyev stressed. Armitage, in his turn, thanked President
Aliyev and the Azerbaijani people for supporting the United States in
fighting terrorism. `Azerbaijan is in coalition with us and takes
part in joint operations. I would like to particularly mention the
courageous service of the Azerbaijani military personnel who are
assisting us in Iraq and Afghanistan. In fact, our aim is to reach a
higher level in bilateral economic, political, military and social
cooperation.’ Touching upon the conflict over Upper Garabagh, the
U.S. official said that his country wanted the conflict to be settled
peacefully. `We believe that the Caucasus may become a very good
partner of the West in the future. However, above all, the existing
problems in the Caucasus should be solved. Therefore, I have great
confidence in talks with you.’

`No plans for military bases’
Talking to a Saturday news conference for local and foreign media at
Bina Airport prior to departure, Richard Armitage said that the
stationing of U.S. military bases in Azerbaijan was not discussed
with President Aliyev and his country didn’t have such a plan.
Armitage said he was satisfied with the results of his Baku visit. He
extended his gratitude to President Aliyev for the participation of
the Azerbaijani military in peacekeeping operations in Iraq. Stating
that the issue of freedom of press in Azerbaijan was also discussed
during the meeting, Armitage said President Aliyev pledged that
public television would become independent. He added that, “Ilham
Aliyev is promoting the development of the open-minded and
progressive individual”. Underlining that the status of human rights
in Azerbaijan remains unsatisfactory, Armitage said, “The situation
in this field could be better”. Touching upon the settlement of the
Upper Garabagh conflict, the U.S. Deputy Secretary of State said that
the OSCE Minsk Group was only a mediator on this matter. He also
expressed his hope that the conflicting sides would reach agreement.
Stating that it would be good if borders between Turkey and Armenia
opened, Armitage said that during the meeting President Aliyev
stressed that opening the Turkish-Armenian borders would negatively
affect the resolution of the conflict. In reply to a question about
the stationing the U.S. military bases in Azerbaijan, Armitage said
that this issue was not discussed with President Aliyev and his
country didn’t have any plans to do so. It is also indicative that
besides Gambar and Karimli, the meeting was also attended by Garayev
and Imanov, who are often referred to as possible leaders of the new
opposition. Furthermore, the pro-government wing was represented by
S.Sayidov and A.Mammadkhanov, who are deemed in the West as the
“young reformers” of President Aliyev’s team. The Chairman of the
Party of National Independence of Azerbaijan (PNIA) Etibar Mammadov,
who often takes part in such meetings, was not present. This could be
explained by the fact that Mammadov has not made many public
appearances since the presidential elections. Asked of the US
military assistance to Azerbaijan, Armitage said that Azerbaijan
supported military action in Iraq and Afghanistan, which put a heavy
burden on Baku. It is for this reason that Baku is receiving greater
military assistance from Washington than Armenia. Also, Azerbaijan is
supplying fuel for US aircraft en route to Iraq, which also promotes
increased US financial assistance to Azerbaijan. However, the volume
of US economic aid to Armenia is greater than that to Azerbaijan and
other countries in the region, Armitage added.